Commissioners rip FCC's spendy school Wi-Fi plan

Grant Gross |
July 9, 2014

A proposal by U.S. Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler to pump billions of dollars into Wi-Fi deployment at schools and libraries has run into a snag, with the commission's two Republican suggesting the money will come from U.S. residents' pocketbooks.

A proposal by U.S. Federal Communications Commission Chairman Tom Wheeler to pump billions of dollars into Wi-Fi deployment at schools and libraries has run into a snag, with the commission's two Republican suggesting the money will come from U.S. residents' pocketbooks.

The commission is scheduled to vote Friday on Wheeler's proposal to revamp the agency's E-Rate program, but Republican Commissioners Ajit Pai and Michael O'Rielly questioned where the money will come from. E-Rate, a 17-year-old program funded through telephone service fees, helps schools and libraries connect to the Internet.

Wheeler's plan "doesn't identify where the money will come from to fund this new program," he said. "As it stands, the proposal will blow a $2.7 billion hole in E-Rate's budget — one that the FCC has promised outside parties it'll fill with a post-election increase in Americans' phone bills."

Pai complained that Wheeler's office has "rejected almost every suggestion that I made" to amend the program and find a compromise, he said. Wheeler "has no interest in seriously negotiating with Republican commissioners and is determined to pass this item" with votes from the commission's three Democrats, he added.

Pai also raised concerns that the proposal doesn't give small, rural schools and libraries a "fair shake," instead directing most of the E-Rate funds to large, urban schools.

O'Rielly, on Monday, questioned the long-term budget of the Universal Service Fund, the pool of money that funds E-Rate. The Congressional Budget Office projects the USF budget, about $8.5 billion in 2013, to grow to $10 billion in 2015 and $11 billion by 2024, he noted in a blog post.

"So what do [the] projections mean for the average American?" he wrote. "They represent an ever growing strain on their pocketbook. This cost is inevitably passed on to consumers in the form of a fee on their phone bills."

O'Rielly called on the FCC to offset any increases in E-Rate spending with budget cuts for other USF programs.